- Stockport Viaduct
Infobox Historic building
caption=Stockport Viaduct
name=Stockport Viaduct
location_town=Stockport ,Greater Manchester
location_country=England
map_type=Greater Manchester
latitude=53.409186
longitude=-2.164215
architect=
client=
engineer=George W. Buck
construction_start_date=1839
completion_date=1840
date_demolished=
cost=£70,000
structural_system=
style=
size=The Stockport Viaduct is a Grade II* listed structure designed byGeorge Watson Buck inStockport ,Greater Manchester (gbmapping|SJ89089030).cite web |title=Stockport Viaduct
url=http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/details/default.aspx?id=210778 |publisher=Images of England |accessdate=2008-02-29 ] cite web |title=Stockport Railway Viaduct |url=http://www.pastscape.org.uk/hob.aspx?hob_id=76880 |publisher=Pastscape.org.uk |accessdate=2008-04-25] At convert|33.85|m|ft high, Stockport's railway viaduct is one of western Europe's biggest brick structures and represents a major feat of Victorian engineering. Completed in 1840, Stockport Railway Viaduct was the largest in the world at the time of its construction and a key pioneering structure of the early railway age. Eleven million bricks were used in its construction - if laid end to end they would stretch 1,500 miles. At one stage, 600 workers were employed in shifts, day and night, to complete the massive structure. It was entirely built of layer upon layer of common brick. It opened in 1842 with services running toCrewe , enabling travellers from Stockport to reachLondon . Northern artistL.S. Lowry was an admirer, depicting its 27 arches in a number of his works. It was also widened from two to four tracks during 1887-1889. Floodlit and given a facelift in 1989 in a £3 million restoration project, the viaduct is now part of a main line service carrying passengers to destinations across the UK.History
The 27 arch viaduct took 21 months to build and cost £70,000. It was officially opened on June 4th 1840 [Francis Whishaw, The Railways of Great Britain and Ireland Practically Described, J. Weale, 1842, p306 [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=lPkgAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA306&lpg=PA306&dq=1840+viaduct+stockport&source=web&ots=WKn-NWDHf8&sig=IrZl3O2buSxEsIKnqolRsMWlK-k&hl=en google books] ] . In common with
Stockport railway station , the viaduct was also historically referred to as "Edgeley Viaduct"Edgeley Viaduct, Stockport, about 1890, Science and Society Picture Library, [http://www.scienceandsociety.co.uk/results.asp?
] ]Before the second world war this viaduct was not the largest brick construction, The Krupps Armanents works, in Germany, enjoyed this title Fact|date=April 2008 but that did not survive Allied bombing. Many lives were lost during its construction.Fact|date=April 2008
It has made a brief contribution to literature, being mentioned in the introduction to the Northern Mill Towns in
Elizabeth Gaskell 's North and South.The first section of the Manchester & Birmingham to be completed ran from a temporary station in Manchester, at Travis Street, to a temporary station at Heaton Norris, on the Lancashire side of the Stockport viaduct. Opened for traffic on 4 June 1840, this short line was an immediate success, carrying nearly 2,000 passengers a day during the second half of 1840. Two years later, on 10 May 1842, train services were extended from Heaton Norris to Sandbach and the permanent Manchester station in Store Street was opened.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.